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6 days ago

US, Mexico, Canada announce Ebola-related travel measures ahead of World Cup

A man takes a photo of a replica of the World Cup trophy as he visits the "Epic Album" exhibition, the biggest football exhibition in Latin America that contains relics of legends such as Ronaldo, Cruyff, Pelé and a collection of Mexican national team t-shirts, as the 2026 FIFA World Cup approaches in Mexico at the Museo Yancuic, in Mexico City, Mexico May 15, 2026.
A man takes a photo of a replica of the World Cup trophy as he visits the "Epic Album" exhibition, the biggest football exhibition in Latin America that contains relics of legends such as Ronaldo, Cruyff, Pelé and a collection of Mexican national team t-shirts, as the 2026 FIFA World Cup approaches in Mexico at the Museo Yancuic, in Mexico City, Mexico May 15, 2026. Photo : REUTERS/Raquel Cunha

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The United States, Mexico and Canada on Thursday announced aligned public health travel ​measures for people coming from African regions at the greatest ‌risk from Ebola, they said in a joint statement, as they aim to protect citizens and visitors during the World Cup.

“The health and safety of every person ​in the region remains our highest priority as we welcome ​the world to North America,” they said in the statement, ⁠which did not detail the aligned measures.

The World Health Organization on ​Sunday, May 17, declared an Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of ​Congo a Public Health Emergency of International Concern and said there was a high risk it could spread to neighboring countries.

The decision has prompted governments to step up ​travel-related containment measures.

Washington last week banned non-citizens who had traveled to ​the DRC, Uganda or South Sudan in recent weeks from entering the United States. ‌On, ⁠the ban was extended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to green card holders who have been in those countries in the previous 21 days.

Canada has banned residents from the DRC, Uganda and South ​Sudan from entering ​the country for ⁠90 days, which started on Wednesday.

Canadian citizens, permanent residents and other foreign nationals who have been in affected ​areas in recent weeks and do not have symptoms ​will ⁠have to quarantine for 21 days from May 30, according to a statement from Canada’s public health agency.

Mexico’s Health Secretary David Kershenovich on Monday outlined ⁠tighter ​Ebola screening measures at airports, urging the public ​to avoid travel to DRC and asking arrivals from the country to observe a 21-day ​quarantine.

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